Projection body

In convex geometry, the projection body ΠK of a centrally symmetric body K in Euclidean space is the star body such that for any vector u, the support function of ΠK in the direction u is the (n  1)-dimensional volume of the projection of K onto the hyperplane u.

The intersection body IK of K is defined similarly, as the star body such that for any vector u the radial function of IK from the origin in direction u is the (n  1)-dimensional volume of the intersection of K with the hyperplane u. Equivalently, the radial function of the intersection body IK is the Funk transform of the radial function of K. Projection bodies were discussed by Petty (1967), and intersection bodies were introduced by Lutwak (1988).

Minkowski showed that the projection body of a convex body is convex.

Koldobsky (1998a) showed that a centrally symmetric star-shaped body is an intersection body if and only if the function 1/||x|| is a positive definite distribution, where ||x|| is the homogeneous function of degree 1 that is 1 on the boundary of the body, and Koldobsky (1998b) used this to show that the unit balls lp
n
, 2 < p  ∞ in n-dimensional space with the lp norm are intersection bodies for n=4 but are not intersection bodies for n  5.

See also

References

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